Accepted Manuscript II Removal of phosphonates from industrial wastewater with UV/Fe , Fenton and UV/ Fenton treatment Eduard Rott, Ralf Minke, Ulusoy Bali, Heidrun Steinmetz PII:
S0043-1354(17)30483-9
DOI:
10.1016/j.watres.2017.06.009
Reference:
WR 12963
To appear in:
Water Research
Received Date: 8 February 2017 Revised Date:
2 June 2017
Accepted Date: 4 June 2017
Please cite this article as: Rott, E., Minke, R., Bali, U., Steinmetz, H., Removal of phosphonates from II industrial wastewater with UV/Fe , Fenton and UV/Fenton treatment, Water Research (2017), doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2017.06.009. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 1
Removal of phosphonates from industrial wastewater with
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UV/FeII, Fenton and UV/Fenton treatment Eduard Rotta,*, Ralf Minkea, Ulusoy Balib, Heidrun Steinmetzc
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a
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of Stuttgart, Bandtäle 2, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany
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b
Environmental Engineering Department, Cumhuriyet University, 58140 Sivas, Turkey
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c
Chair of Resource Efficient Wastewater Technology, University of Kaiserslautern, Paul-
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Ehrlich-Str. 14, 67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany
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* Corresponding author. Tel.: +49 711 68560497; fax: +49 711 68563729; E-mail address:
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[email protected] (E. Rott)
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Graphical abstract
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Industry:
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Institute for Sanitary Engineering, Water Quality and Solid Waste Management, University
Catalyst: H2SO4/ FeSO4 NaOH UV lamp
UV-FSR: UV free surface reactor ST: Sedimentation tank NT: Neutralization tank
Catalyzed photolysis: H2SO4/NaOH
(Photo-)Fenton:
Phosphonate reduced wastewater ST
NT
UV-FSR
Fenton reagent: FeSO4/H2O2
Receiving water
Sludge Ca(OH)2/NaOH
UV lamp
H2SO4
AC C
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Paper/ textile production Rinsing processes in industry Other industries
Concentrate
EP
Cooling system
Organically polluted wastewater
ST
ST NT
UV-FSR Sludge (acidic)
Phosphonate reduced wastewater
Wastewater treatment plant
Sludge (neutral)
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Abstract
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Phosphonates are an important group of phosphorus-containing compounds due to their
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increasing industrial use and possible eutrophication potential. This study involves
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investigations into the methods UV/FeII, Fenton and UV/Fenton for their removal from a pure 1
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT water matrix and industrial wastewaters. It could be shown that the degradability of
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phosphonates by UV/FeII (6 kWh/m³) in pure water crucially depended on the pH and was
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higher the less phosphonate groups a phosphonate contains. The UV/FeII method is
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recommended in particular for the treatment of concentrates with nitrogen-free phosphonates,
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only little turbidity and a low content of organic compounds. Using Fenton reagent, the
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degradation of polyphosphonates was relatively weak in a pure water matrix (<20%
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transformation to o-PO43–). By means of the Photo-Fenton method (6 kWh/m³), those
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phosphonates with the smallest numbers of phosphonate groups were easier degraded as well
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at pH 3.5 in a pure water matrix (o-PO43– formation rates of up to 80%). Despite an
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incomplete transformation of organically bound phosphorus to o-PO43– with Fenton reagent in
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an organically highly polluted wastewater (max. 15%), an almost total removal of the total P
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occurred. The most efficient total P elimination rates were achieved in accordance with the
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following Fenton implementation: reaction → sludge separation (acidic) → neutralization of
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the supernatant → sludge separation (neutral). Accordingly, a neutralization directly after the
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reaction phase led to a lower total P removal extent.
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Keywords: Phosphonates, metal-catalyzed photolysis, Photo-Fenton, wastewater treatment
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1 Introduction
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1.1 Motivation
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Phosphonates are versatile complexing agents due to their excellent complex stability and
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their substoichiometric effectiveness as ‟thresholders” (Gledhill and Feijtel, 1992). They are
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used in the paper and textile industries, are part of household and industrial detergents as well
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as cosmetics, are used as antiscalants in membrane technology, as cooling stabilizers in
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cooling systems and are also found in oil production, cement, electroplating, and medical
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applications. In 1998, global consumption of phosphonates was 56,000 tons (Davenport et al.,
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 2000). A total consumption of 94,000 tons in 2012 shows a significant increase in the
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consumption of these compounds (EPA, 2013).
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Fig. 1 gives an overview of the chemical structures of the quantitatively most important
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phosphonates PBTC, HEDP, NTMP, EDTMP and DTPMP. The covalent C-P bond in the
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phosphonate groups (C-PO(OH)2) of the phosphonates ensures high molecular stability
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(Gledhill and Feijtel, 1992). Phosphonates can be divided into the group of nitrogen-free
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phosphonates, also characterized by carboxyl and hydroxyl groups, and into the group of
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aminophosphonates. Phosphonates with more than one phosphonate group are also referred to
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as polyphosphonates. Phosphonates have a high water-solubility, a low solubility in organic
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solvents and a very low volatility (Nowack, 2003; Gledhill and Feijtel, 1992).
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O
HO
O
O
H3C OH
O
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P O OH OH
PBTC 2-Phosphonobutane-1,2,4tricarboxylic acid
O HO
P OH
OH OH P OH O
HEDP 1-Hydroxyethylidene(1,1-diphosphonic acid)
HO P HO
N HO
OH
HO P HO
O OH
HO
O
OH OH
N
HO
P
NTMP Nitrilotrimethylphosphonic acid
P
O
N
P
OH P OH O
O
EDTMP Ethylenediaminetetra(methylene phosphonic acid)
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HO
P
O
O
OH
P
O HO P HO
N
OH HO OH HO
O P
O N
N P O
P OH OH
OH OH
DTPMP Diethylenetriaminepenta(methylene phosphonic acid)
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Fig. 1:
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Phosphonates are subject to natural elimination mechanisms (Nowack and Stone, 2000;
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Matthijs et al., 1989; Schowanek and Verstraete, 1990), which speak for long-term release of
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bioavailable ortho-phosphate (o-PO43–) in water, thus a contribution of phosphonates to the
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eutrophication of water bodies cannot be excluded (Studnik et al., 2015; Grohmann and
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Horstmann, 1989). Direct discharge of phosphonate-containing cooling water or membrane
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concentrate, as well as insufficiently purified municipal wastewater, can also lead to increased
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phosphorus concentrations in water bodies. Furthermore, phosphonates are associated with
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the remobilization of toxic heavy metals bound in sediments (Gledhill and Feijtel, 1992;
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Bordas and Bourg, 1998; Nowack, 2003). Industrial effluents are partly directed to central
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Chemical structures of phosphonates (based on ACS, 2016).
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT wastewater treatment plants, either unpurified or pre-cleaned (indirect discharge). There,
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phosphonates can interfere with phosphate precipitation by masking the precipitant
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(Horstmann and Grohmann, 1984). In biological wastewater treatment plants, phosphonates
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are neither degraded aerobically (Horstmann and Grohmann, 1988) nor anaerobically
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(Nowack, 1998). However, phosphonates are removed to degrees of 50 to at least 95%
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(Metzner, 1990; Müller et al., 1984; Nowack, 1998 and 2002). Their elimination in
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wastewater treatment plants is therefore primarily ascribed to adsorption onto activated sludge
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and metal precipitates (Nowack, 2002). Accordingly, these compounds are brought into the
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environment when the contaminated sewage sludge is applied in agriculture. But still low
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concentrations of phosphonates may leave wastewater treatment plants via the water path
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through the effluent. Removal of phosphonates from industrial wastewater before its direct or
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indirect discharge is therefore particularly desirable.
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Phosphonate-contaminated industrial wastewaters can have very different compositions: on
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the one hand, usually clear, organically only slightly polluted concentrates with typically high
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water hardness and anion concentrations (e.g. cooling water, membrane concentrate), and
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organically polluted wastewaters, e.g. wastewaters from industrial rinsing processes and
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wastewaters from the textile and paper industries.
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Studies about the elimination of phosphonates (elimination by flocculation, filtration, O3,
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MnII/O2, UV/FeII) (Fischer, 1992; Klinger et al., 1998; Nowack and Stone, 2000; Boels et al.,
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2010; Zhou et al., 2014; Lesueur et al., 2005) generally comprise experiments with pure water
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spiked with phosphonates or a very small phosphonate spectrum, so that the influence of the
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wastewater matrix effects on the elimination processes is largely unknown. So far, there is
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still no established procedure for the selective removal of phosphonates from wastewater.
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Phosphonates are oxidized to a greater extent, especially in the presence of metal ions
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(MnII/O2, UV/FeII, FeII/H2O2) (Nowack and Stone, 2000; Matthijs et al., 1989; Pirkanniemi et
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT al., 2003). This study therefore investigates the removal of phosphonates from industrial
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wastewaters by the promising UV/FeII and (UV/)FeII/H2O2 methods exploiting these
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properties.
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1.2 Metal-catalyzed photolysis (UV/FeII)
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Matthijs et al. (1989), Gledhill and Feijtel (1992) and Fischer (1993) have shown that
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phosphonates are degraded to o-PO43– in the presence of metals and UV radiation or sunlight.
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Of all the metals studied (FeIII, CrIII, ZnII, CuII, CaII), iron proved to be the most efficient
94
catalyst. In the experiments of Lesueur et al. (2005), after 1.5 h at least 80% of the organically
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bound phosphorus of the aminophosphonates NTMP, EDTMP, DTPMP and HDTMP (1
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mg/L) dissolved in pure water in a UV immersion lamp reactor (150 W, medium pressure) at
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pH 3 and 5–6 in the presence of 0.2 mg/L FeII was converted to o-PO43– (due to the complex
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analysis of phosphonates, only the total P or their oxidation to o-PO43– are determined in most
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studies, not the concentrations of the phosphonates themselves). Without iron, the reaction
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proceeded more slowly, but resulted in a pronounced o-PO43– formation of between 70 and
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90% at the same pH values. The reaction proceeded significantly slower at pH 10, so that the
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o-PO43– formation extent did not exceed the 75% mark even after 1.5 h for all phosphonates.
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The experiments showed that aminophosphonates can be degraded even without a catalyst at a
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sufficiently high UV power, the use of a catalyst, however, enhances the degradation of
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phosphonates significantly and may also decrease the required UV energy consumption.
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Matthijs et al. (1989) suggested that the degradation mechanism is a photoinduced ligand-to-
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metal charge transfer, where FeIII-complexes are subject to photolysis. Lesueur et al. (2005),
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however, did not rule out that FeII-phosphonate complexes can also be photolytically
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degraded.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT So far, there are no current studies about the removal of phosphonates with the UV/FeII
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method. All the studies mentioned have in common that the phosphonates have only been
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spiked in pure water, so that no conclusions can be drawn about the technical feasibility of the
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UV/FeII method for selective phosphonate removal from wastewater.
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1.3 Fenton (FeII/H2O2) and Photo-Fenton (UV/FeII/H2O2)
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Phosphonates have a high stability against decomposition by H2O2, whereby they are able to
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function as bleach stabilizers under strongly alkaline conditions and at very high
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temperatures, such as those present in bleaching liquors of the paper and textile industries. In
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contact with H2O2, aminophosphonates are readily oxidized to N-oxides which retain their
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ability of complexation and peroxide stabilization (Croft et al., 1992; Carter et al., 1967). One
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way to oxidize H2O2 stable compounds is to convert the oxidizing agent into a much more
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reactive form by means of catalysts as in the Fenton reaction. The complex reaction
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mechanism of the Fenton reaction was described extensively by Ya Sychev and Isak (1995)
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and can be summarized as follows:
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Fe2+ + H2O2 → Fe3+ + OH– + •OH Fe3+ + H2O2 → Fe2+ + •O2H + H+
(1) (2)
In the Fenton reaction, ferrous iron is oxidized to ferric iron by H2O2 to produce a highly
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reactive hydroxyl radical (•OH) (Equation 1). Ferric iron can be reduced to ferrous iron again
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in the Fenton-like reaction releasing a hydroperoxyl radical (•O2H) (Equation 2). The
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effectiveness of Fenton reagent can be enhanced by UV radiation. This is essentially due to
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the reaction mechanisms in Equations 3 and 4 (Faust and Hoigné, 1990; Legrini et al., 1993).
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Fe(OH)2+ + hv → Fe2+ + •OH
(3)
H2O2 + hv → 2 •OH
(4)
UV light stimulates the reduction of ferric iron resulting in the release of further hydroxyl
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radicals to form ferrous iron. Thus, the accumulation of ferric iron and the premature
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termination of the Fenton reaction are counteracted. Furthermore, hydrogen peroxide is
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homolytically cleaved into two hydroxyl radicals under exposure to UV light.
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The higher the reaction pH is, the more unreactive iron hydroxides are formed, which is why
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the Fenton reagent is generally dosed at low pH values. The precipitated sludge acts as an
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adsorbent for reaction products as well as for stable compounds.
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Croft
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aminophosphonates in detail. They found that the peroxide stabilizing effect is not due to the
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retardation of the Fenton reaction (Equation 1). On the contrary, they found that the
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complexation of FeII by aminophosphonates contributed to an increase in the rate constant of
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the Fenton reaction (75 L/mol/s without and 1·104–2·105 L/mol/s in the presence of
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aminophosphonates). The peroxide stabilizing effect is much more due to the fact that
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aminophosphonates stabilize the higher valence state of iron, hinder the effective reduction of
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FeIII to FeII (Equation 2) and thus interfere with the Fenton cycle. Experiments on the removal
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of phosphonates spiked in pure water by means of Fenton reagent were only carried out by
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Grohmann and Horstmann (1989) and by Fürhacker et al. (2005). Grohmann and Horstmann
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(1989) described an experiment in which only 1% of a Fe3+-PBTC complex (100 µmol/L, 27
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mg/L phosphonate) was converted to o-PO43– by equimolar FeII and H2O2. However, the pH
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value underlying the experiment was not mentioned, so that these test results have only
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limited validity. Fürhacker et al. (2005) showed that 1 mg/L HDTMP at pH 3 and 5.8 were
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converted much more effectively to o-PO43– by means of Photo-Fenton reagent
al.
(1992)
investigated
the
mechanism
of
peroxide
stabilization
by
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT (UV/FeII/H2O2) than by means of UV/FeII (same concentrations, only without H2O2). Thus
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far, there have neither been conclusive studies about the removal of phosphonates with Fenton
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reagent with pure water, nor with industrial wastewater, which means that the Fenton and the
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Photo-Fenton method for phosphonate removal still requires considerable research.
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1.4 H2O2 dosage
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The stoichiometrically required H2O2 concentration (cH₂O₂, 100%) can be calculated from the
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COD concentration (chemical oxygen demand for the oxidation of organic constituents in
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water) of the raw sample. The COD is determined by adding the much more reactive
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potassium dichromate to the sample, the oxidation takes place under optimal conditions (high
160
temperature, acidic pH, catalyst, etc.) and the amount of potassium dichromate consumed is
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converted into oxygen equivalents. Such a conversion can also be carried out for H2O2. For
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the reduction of 1 mol H2O2 (34 g/mol), 2 mol electrons are required (Equation 5). This is half
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the amount of the substance which is required during the reduction of 1 mol O2 (32 g/mol)
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(Equation 6). Taking this ratio into consideration, a factor of 2.125 results, which must be
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multiplied by the COD of the raw sample in order to determine the stoichiometrically required
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H2O2 concentration (Equation 7). Stoichiometrically under-dosed and over-dosed H2O2
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concentrations can be set in the percentage ratio (VH₂O₂) to the stoichiometrically required
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concentration. By means of Equation 7, this ratio can also be represented as a function of the
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COD of the raw sample (Equation 8).
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H2O2 + H+ + 2 e– → H2O + OH–
(5)
O2 + 4 H+ + 4 e– → 2 H2O
(6)
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT g 4e– 34 mol H2 O2 mg mg cH₂O₂, 100% ቂ ቃ = – · ·COD ቂ ቃ =2.125·COD ቂ ቃ g L 2e L L 32 O mol 2
(7)
mg ቃ mg L -1 -1 mg VH₂O₂ ሾ%ሿ= ·100%=c ቂ ቃ ·100%·2.125 ·COD ቂ ቃ H₂O₂ mg L L cH₂O₂, 100% ቂ ቃ L
(8)
mg
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If we assume that mineralization of organic matter converts C, H, P, and N into inorganic
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carbonate, water, ortho-phosphate, and nitrate, then the COD for the total oxidation of 3 mg/L
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phosphonate (experiments of this work with a pure water matrix were always carried out with
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this concentration) can be calculated as follows: PBTC: 2.310 mg/L, HEDP: 1.398 mg/L,
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NTMP: 2.088 mg/L, EDTMP: 2.751 mg/L, DTPMP: 3.098 mg/L (Supplementary data,
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Section A).
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2 Materials and methods
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2.1 Examined wastewaters
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2.1.1
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For experiments with wastewaters, cooling tower effluent (concentrate) and wastewater from
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phosphonate production (organically polluted wastewater) were obtained. All samples were
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taken randomly during operation. After sampling, all samples were stored at approx. 4°C
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without further processing and were generally used within one week.
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High alkaline earth metal and COD concentrations can result in severe problems regarding the
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detection of phosphonates in wastewater (Nowack, 1997; Klinger et al., 1997; Knepper,
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2003). Only recently, Schmidt et al. (2014) described a method using the coupled system IC-
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ICP-MS, which combines the advantages of low determination limits for polyphosphonates in
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the range of 0.1 µg/L with the applicability to environmental samples. Whether this method
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hardness still needs further investigation, which is why no phosphonate detection was applied
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in this work. However, In all wastewater samples the total P of the raw samples (TP0) was
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predominantly composed of the dissolved organic phosphorus fraction to which phosphonates
192
are attributed. Therefore, the determination of TP and o-PO43–-P was considered sufficient for
193
all experiments.
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2.1.2
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The wastewater sample from a coal-fired power plant was taken directly from the cooling
196
tower basin. The cooling tower is fed with flocculated river water. According to the operator,
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the hardness stabilizer PBTC is used. The taken sample had only concentrations of 0.15 mg/L
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TP0 and 0.03 mg/L o-PO43–-P due to prolonged rainfall prior to sampling. Gartiser and Urich
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(2002), however, assume typical phosphonate use concentrations in cooling systems of 1.5 to
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20 mg/L. Accordingly, and to allow better comparability of the results with pure water
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experiments in which phosphonate concentrations of 3 mg/L were used, the sample was
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spiked with 3 mg/L PBTC (0.35 mg/L PBTC-P) resulting in a TP0 concentration of 0.5 mg/L.
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The cooling tower effluent (pH 7.4) was very clear (3 NTU) and colorless with a very low
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COD of 20 mg/L, a general water hardness of 35–40 dGH (160–180 mg/L Ca, 50–60 mg/L
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Mg), an electrical conductivity of 2.1 mS/cm and an acid capacity to pH 4.3 of 1.8 mmol/L.
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Further parameters were 380 mg/L chloride, 390 mg/L sulfate, 0.14–0.16 mg/L Fe, 1.3–1.5
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mg/L Al and <45 µg/L Mn.
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2.1.3
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The phosphonate producer synthesizes technical solutions and solids of polyphosphonates,
210
primarily HEDP, NTMP, EDTMP, and DTPMP. Wastewater is mainly produced when the
211
reactors are rinsed. The wastewater sample taken had a very high TP0 concentration of
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350 mg/L with an o-PO43–-P concentration of only approx. 10 mg/L. It must therefore be
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Cooling tower effluent of a power plant
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Wastewater from phosphonate production
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT assumed that phosphonates formed the largest proportion of the phosphorus compounds
214
present. The pH of the sample was 9 and the COD concentration was 4.8 g/L. Furthermore,
215
the following composition was typical for this kind of wastewater (minimum and maximum
216
values in three randomly taken samples): 14–28 mS/cm electrical conductivity, 110–750 NTU
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turbidity, 5.4–18.7 mmol/L acid capacity to pH 4.3, 30–42 mg/L Ca, 2.8–3.4 mg/L Mg, 1.9–
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2.8 mg/L Fe, 1.7–2.3 mg/L Al, 47–61 µg/L Mn, 2.7–7.9 g/L chloride and 1.9–4.0 g/L sulfate.
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2.2 Reagents and chemicals
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For all stock solutions and dilutions, pure water was used produced on-site by means of an ion
221
exchanger (Seradest SD 2000) and a downstream filter unit (Seralpur PRO 90 CN).
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FeSO4·7H2O (analytical grade) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, Missouri,
223
U.S.A.), H2O2 solution (30%, pure) from AppliChem (Darmstadt, Germany), H2SO4 solution
224
(95–97%) from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany) and solid NaOH from VWR International
225
(Radnor, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.). PBTC was obtained from Zschimmer & Schwarz Mohsdorf
226
(Burgstädt, Germany) as a technical solution (50%, CUBLEN P 50). HEDP·H2O (≥95%) and
227
NTMP (≥97%) were purchased as solids from Sigma-Aldrich. EDTMP (approx. 5.3% water
228
of crystallization) and DTPMP (approx. 16% water of crystallization) were synthesized by
229
Zschimmer & Schwarz Mohsdorf. All phosphonate samples had no significant phosphate
230
impurity (ratio of phosphate-P to total P: <1%, from own measurements).
231
2.3 Experimental procedure
232
2.3.1
233
In Experiments 1 and 2, the degradability of the phosphonates PBTC, HEDP, NTMP,
234
EDTMP and DTPMP dosed to pure water in a concentration of 3 mg/L (0.35 mg/L PBTC-P,
235
0.90 mg/L HEDP-P, 0.93 mg/L NTMP-P, 0.85 mg/L EDTMP-P, 0.81 mg/L DTPMP-P) was
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investigated by means of Fenton, UV/Fenton, UV/FeII, UV/H2O2 and UV only by varying the
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Overview of the experiments
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT FeSO4 and H2O2 concentrations as well as the pH. In Experiments 3 and 4, the UV/FeII and
238
the (Photo-)Fenton method were investigated with phosphonate-containing industrial
239
wastewater regarding the elimination of phosphorus and the required dosage concentrations
240
(variation of FeII-H2O2-ratio and H2O2 concentration). Depending on the experiment, several
241
samples were prepared in duplicate or triplicate and analyzed with single determinations. The
242
results of duplicate or triplicate samples were averaged and the standard deviation was
243
calculated (graphical representation with error bars).
244
Phosphonates were spiked using 3 g/L phosphonate stock solutions prepared in advance. All
245
test series were carried out in 100 mL bottles on magnetic stirrers (250 rpm) filled with either
246
50 mL (samples with pure water) or 100 mL sample (samples with wastewater since due to
247
the higher amount of analyzed parameters more volume was required). The stoichiometric
248
H2O2 concentration was calculated using the chemical oxygen demand (COD) of the raw
249
sample (see Section 1.4). In the case of low dosage concentrations (<0.2–0.3 g/L Fe),
250
FeSO4·7H2O was dosed from a solution prepared with pure water; otherwise, FeSO4·7H2O
251
was directly dosed into the sample bottles. The irradiation of samples with UV light was
252
carried out as described in Section 2.3.2. Subsequent to a one-hour reaction phase, a partial
253
volume was taken from all samples in the still homogeneous state, which was analyzed for the
254
o-PO43– concentration. In order to determine the sum of dissolved, precipitated and adsorbed
255
o-PO43–, the analysis was conducted without membrane filtration (WMF) (marked as ‟o-PO43–
256
-PWMF”, for further descriptions see Section 2.4). After neutralization, the supernatants were
257
analyzed for the TP, o-PO43–-P or COD. For detailed descriptions of the experiments, see
258
Sections 2.3.3 to 2.3.6.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 2.3.2
UV lamp
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Four sample bottles, each equipped with magnetic rods, were randomly placed in a square
261
arrangement under the Sterisol NN 30/89 UV lamp (30 W total power, approx. 300 W/m²,
262
low-pressure, 11 W UV-C power at 254 nm) on four magnetic stirrers. The distance between
263
the sample surface and the UV lamp was generally about 10 cm. The irradiated sample
264
surface was about 10 cm2. For a sample volume of 100 mL, the specific energy consumption
265
per sample was therefore about 3 kWh/m³ (=300 W/m²·10 cm²·1 h/100 mL). Of this, the
266
active UV-C range accounted for 1.1 kWh/m³ (=3 kWh/m³·11 W/30 W). With a sample
267
volume of 50 mL, the specific energy consumption corresponded to 6 kWh/m³, of which 2.2
268
kWh/m³ accounted for the UV-C range.
269
2.3.3
270
1 liter of pure water was spiked with a phosphonate concentration of 3 mg/L, brought to pH
271
3.5 by means of H2SO4, and then intensively stirred and analyzed for the TP0 concentration.
272
FeSO4 was added at various concentrations to 50 mL samples of this solution (molar FeII-
273
H2O2-ratios: 1:30–5:1 and one ratio in the range between 1:100 and 1:400 depending on the
274
phosphonate to take into account an equimolar FeII-phosphonate-ratio as well; the highest
275
molar FeII-phosphonate-ratio tested was 2,000:1). Then, H2O2 was added to the samples in a
276
stoichiometrically eightfold excess (at this H2O2 concentration a maximum of o-PO43–
277
formation could be observed in preliminary experiments; Supplementary data, Section B)
278
resulting in a maximum pH decrease down to pH 2.75 depending on the FeII concentration.
279
After stirring for 1 h in the open bottle (an additional pH drop of no more than 0.2 was
280
observed here; the pH range of this experiment was therefore 2.5–3.5), the o-PO43–-PWMF
281
concentration was determined in each sample. Each sample was prepared in duplicate.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT UV/FeII, UV/H2O2, UV/FeII/H2O2 in a pure water matrix (Experiment 2)
2.3.4
283
1 liter of pure water was provided with a phosphonate concentration of 3 mg/L and FeSO4
284
several times in an equimolar ratio to the phosphonate. Batches without FeSO4
285
(c(FeII):c(phosphonate)=0) were also prepared. The initial pH (3.5, 5.0, 6.5, 8.0, 9.5) was
286
adjusted by means of H2SO4 or NaOH, the solution was then stirred intensively and analyzed
287
for the TP0 concentration. Optionally, H2O2 was added in the stoichiometrically sixteen-fold
288
concentration to 50 mL samples of this solution (at this H2O2 concentration a maximum of
289
o-PO43– formation could be observed in preliminary experiments; Supplementary data,
290
Section B). After stirring for 1 h under the UV lamp, the o-PO43–-PWMF concentration was
291
determined in each sample. Due to the experimental setup (the UV lamp was mounted directly
292
above the reaction vessel), a pH correction was not possible during this stirring phase.
293
However, the pH after 1 h was measured and depending on the tested variant (UV, UV/FeII,
294
UV/H2O2, UV/FeII/H2O2), different, mostly only small pH changes were observed. Thus, the
295
following pH ranges were tested in this experiment: 3.4–3.6, 4.6–5.0, 6.2–6.9, 7.0–8.0, 8.0–
296
9.5. Each sample was prepared in triplicate.
297
2.3.5
298
The cooling tower effluent spiked with 3 mg/L PBTC was brought to pH 3.5 using H2SO4.
299
Optionally, 4.6 mg/L FeII and optionally 30 mg/L H2O2 were added to 100 mL samples of this
300
sample in order to test the following four variants: UV, UV/FeII, UV/H2O2, UV/FeII/H2O2
301
(because 100 mL samples were used, the specific UV energy consumption was half as high
302
[3 kWh/m³] as in the experiments with pure water [6 kWh/m³]). Each of these variants was
303
prepared fourfold (four bottles with the same contents). After stirring for 1 h under the UV
304
lamp, the o-PO43–-PWMF concentration (homogeneous) was determined for each variant in all
305
four samples. The addition of chemicals and the contact time had not resulted in any
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT significant pH change (maximum drop down to pH 3.4) due to the strong buffer capacity of
307
the wastewater. Two of the initial four equally prepared samples of each variant were
308
immediately membrane-filtered (0.45 µm pore size, nylon filter) and the o-PO43– as well as
309
the TP concentrations of the filtrate (pH 3.5) were determined. The two other samples were
310
first neutralized by means of NaOH (pH 7.0), then membrane-filtered and now the o-PO43– as
311
well as the TP concentrations of the filtrate were determined.
312
2.3.6
313
The raw sample of phosphonate production wastewater was brought to pH 2.5 by means of
314
H2SO4. After intensive mixing, it was analyzed for the TP0, o-PO43– and COD concentrations.
315
FeSO4 and H2O2 were added to several 100 mL samples of this sample resulting in a pH
316
decreased to 2.2–2.5. Each sample was prepared in replicate. Each 100 mL sample was then
317
stirred in the open bottle for 1 h. Here, an insignificant additional pH drop of no more than
318
0.15 was observed. Immediately thereafter, the o-PO43–-PWMF concentration (homogeneous)
319
was determined in each sample. The further procedure involved two variants. One of the
320
replicated samples was treated according to the neutralization variant 1. Here, the sample was
321
neutralized directly with NaOH and then sedimented for 15–24 h. The resulting supernatant
322
(‟supernatant N1 (neutral)”) was then analyzed for parameters such as o-PO43–-PWMF and TP.
323
The other sample was treated according to the neutralization variant 2. Here, the sample was
324
first sedimented for 15–24 h without prior pH adjustment. 60 mL of the resulting supernatant
325
(‟supernatant N2a (acidic)”) were transferred into an empty bottle. At that point, the o-PO43–
326
-PWMF and TP concentrations of this supernatant were determined. The transferred sample was
327
first neutralized by means of NaOH, and then sedimented for 15–24 h. The resulting
328
supernatant (‟supernatant N2b (neutral)”) was then analyzed for the o-PO43–-PWMF and TP
329
concentrations.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 2.4 Analytical methods
331
All glass materials which came into contact with the sample were rinsed with hydrochloric
332
acid and pure water in advance. The total P (TP) determination was carried out according to
333
ISO 6878 (molybdenum blue method) by means of a one-hour peroxodisulfate digestion. ISO
334
6878 provides for the separation of the suspended sample components by membrane filtration
335
in advance to the o-PO43– analysis. In order to determine the extent of organically bound
336
phosphorus oxidized to o-PO43– during the UV/FeII and Fenton reactions, such membrane
337
filtration was not carried out (marked as ‟o-PO43–-PWMF”) (see also Supplementary data,
338
Section C). Precipitated phosphate or adsorbed o-PO43–, which are separated from the sample
339
by a filtration, were thus measured together with dissolved o-PO43–. This is important, since
340
during the reaction sludge (predominantly Fe(OH)3) precipitates, so that o-PO43– formed in
341
the reaction phase either adsorbs or reacts to non-soluble FePO4. The ascorbic acid solution
342
(reducing agent) required according to ISO 6878 was always added directly to the partial
343
volumes for the o-PO43–-PWMF determination in order to interrupt the oxidation processes.
344
Turbid and colored samples were additionally treated with a compensation solution according
345
to ISO 6878. The extinctions were measured with the UV/VIS spectrophotometer JASCO V-
346
550.
347
The pH was determined using the WTW pH electrode SenTix 81 in combination with the
348
WTW pH91 instrument. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) was determined using the
349
Hach Lange cuvette rapid tests LCK 414 and LCK 514. In these tests, a certain quantity of
350
sample is added to a predefined mixture of sulfuric acid, potassium dichromate, silver sulfate
351
and mercury salt, heated up to 148°C for two hours in a thermostat (Hach Lange HT200S)
352
and then analyzed in a photometer (Hach Lange DR2800). H2O2-containing samples were
353
pre-treated with Aspergillus niger catalase (Sigma-Aldrich) (max. 20 mg/L) before the
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT phosphorus and COD analysis as hydrogen peroxide in the sample was found to be interfering
355
with the analysis (Talinli and Anderson, 1992).
356
3 Results and discussion
357
3.1 FeII/H2O2 in a pure water matrix (Experiment 1)
358
In order to clarify the question of to what extent phosphonate-phosphorus is oxidized to
359
o-PO43–-P by exposure to Fenton reagent for one hour without influence of UV radiation,
360
H2O2 was added to each phosphonate at pH 2.5–3.5 in pure water in stoichiometrically
361
eightfold excess, while the FeII-H2O2-ratio was subject to a variation.
362
No significant reaction to o-PO43– was observed for all phosphonates when no FeII was dosed
363
(sole H2O2 dosage: c(o-PO43–-PWMF)/c(TP0)<2%, not shown in Fig. 2 due to logarithmic
364
representation), which is plausible with regard to their use as bleach stabilizers in bleaching
365
liquors.
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366 367
Fig. 2:
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0.001
PBTC HEDP NTMP EDTMP DTPMP
0.010 0.100 1.000 II c(Fe )/c(H2O2) (mol/mol)
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c(o-PO43–-PWMF)/c(Total P0) (%)
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
10.000
Oxidation of phosphonates (initial concentration of 3 mg/L) to o-PO43– at pH 2.5–3.5 (pH 3.5 was adjusted using H2SO4; the pH could decrease during the reaction phase to a
369
minimum of 2.5) in water as a result of a one-hour treatment with Fenton reagent at a
370
stoichiometrically eightfold H2O2 dosage concentration with varying FeII-H2O2-ratios
371
(cH₂O₂=8·2.125·COD0, COD0 according to Section 1.4). For circled symbols:
372
c(FeII):c(phosphonate)=1:1.
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In Fig. 2, those points indicated by a circle correspond to an equimolar Fe-phosphonate-ratio
374
for each phosphonate. At the equimolar Fe-phosphonate-ratio, only a slight o-PO43– formation
375
was observed for nitrogen-free phosphonates. At higher FeII-H2O2-ratios – thus also at higher
376
FeII-phosphonate-ratios – some of the iron was present in the excess to the phosphonate and
377
therefore not necessarily completely complexed. For polyphosphonates, this resulted in a
378
maximum 20% conversion to o-PO43–. PBTC stuck out with the highest conversion rates of up
379
to 50%. Accordingly, in the presence of Fenton reagent, a preferred oxidation of the nitrogen-
380
free phosphonate PBTC to o-PO43– occurred, whereas in the presence of MnII/O2 (Nowack
381
and Stone, 2000) and O3 (Klinger et al., 1998) aminophosphonates were preferably oxidized.
382
The very reactive hydroxyl radical which is active in the Fenton reaction is very short-lived
383
and therefore does not react selectively with sites of increased electron density such as O2 and
384
O3 (Lee and von Gunten, 2010). Furthermore, Croft et al. (1992) had shown that N-oxides of
385
the aminophosphonates react with hydroxyl radicals to form long-lived nitroxides in which
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT the C-P bonds remain intact, what could explain the low formation extent of o-PO43– in the
387
case of aminophosphonates. It is thus probable that the C-PO(OH)2 groups in the
388
phosphonates represent the most stable component in the molecule to hydroxyl radicals, and
389
thus are the limiting factor in the degradation rate of phosphonates by Fenton reagent.
390
Especially the nitrogen-free phosphonates with three carboxyl groups in the case of PBTC and
391
an alcohol group in the case of HEDP have functional groups which are not present in
392
aminophosphonates. In order to better understand the role of these functional groups with
393
regard to the stability of these phosphonates, more detailed investigations on the degradation
394
pathways of the phosphonates would be required.
395
Molar FeII-H2O2-ratios >1 were associated with lower o-PO43– formation rates. A strong
396
formation of hydroxyl radicals can occur by means of excessively high excess of iron, so that
397
the hydroxyl radicals react essentially only among themselves (recombination). Furthermore,
398
excess Fe2+ ions can act as free-radical scavengers (Barbusiński and Filipek, 2001). As a
399
result, there are less radicals which can oxidize the phosphonate.
400
3.2 UV/FeII, UV/H2O2, UV/FeII/H2O2 in a pure water matrix (Experiment 2)
401
Fig. 3 summarizes the conversion rates of all phosphonates to o-PO43– at different pH ranges
402
in a pure water matrix as a result of a one-hour treatment with various combinations of UV,
403
FeII (equimolar to phosphonate) and H2O2 dosed in a sixteenfold stoichiometric excess (this
404
dosage concentration was chosen to obtain maximum conversion rates to o-PO43–). For this
405
experiment, the pH of the phosphonate-containing sample was adjusted after the possible FeII
406
dosing. Due to the subsequent H2O2 dosing, the pH value decreased only by a maximum of
407
0.3. Only after the one-hour reaction phase partially a stronger pH change was observed
408
predominantly in the alkaline range. The areas grayed out in Fig. 3 thus illustrate the
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT minimum and maximum pH value that could be measured in the corresponding samples
410
during the experiment. 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 1000 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 100 0 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 1000 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
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(d) UV/FeII/H2O2
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c(o-PO43–-PWMF)/c(Total P0) (%)
409
3
PBTC
411 412
Fig. 3:
4
5 HEDP
6
pH
NTMP
7
8 EDTMP
9
10 DTPMP
Oxidation of phosphonates (initial concentration of 3 mg/L) to o-PO43– as a result of a
413
one-hour UV treatment (6 kWh/m³) with combinations of FeII (equimolar to phosphonate)
414
and H2O2 (cH₂O₂=16·2.125·COD0, COD0 according to Section 1.4) at the pH ranges 3.4–
20
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 415
3.6, 4.6–5.0, 6.2–6.9, 7.0–8.0, 8.0–9.5 in water. The initial pH (3.5, 5.0, 6.5, 8.0, 9.5) was
416
adjusted using H2SO4 and NaOH in the phosphonate and FeSO4 containing sample before
417
addition of H2O2. The pH ranges are therefore due to pH change after the H2O2 dosing
418
and during the reaction phase.
None of the phosphonates could be degraded to o-PO43– by UV irradiation alone (Fig. 3a),
420
which underlines their UV resistance in the noncomplexed state. Lesueur et al. (2005) had
421
been able to detect an oxidation of aminophosphonates to o-PO43– even without a catalyst
422
using a medium-pressure UV lamp at pH values between 3 and 10. In their experiments, a
423
significantly higher specific UV energy consumption was used (112 kWh/m³ compared to the
424
experiment described here of 6 kWh/m³), which could explain the oxidation despite the
425
absence of a catalyst.
426
In the presence of FeII, PBTC was very well degraded by UV radiation (up to 80%) while
427
polyphosphonates showed only low degradation rates below 30% (Fig. 3b). For PBTC,
428
highest degradation occurred in the acidic milieu (pH 3.4–5.0), while polyphosphonates at pH
429
3.4–3.6 were not significantly degraded to o-PO43– at all. With increasing pH, the
430
degradability of PBTC decreased slightly and fell sharply in the alkaline range. At this pH
431
range, a precipitation of metal hydroxides was observed for both PBTC and HEDP. However,
432
due to the o-PO43– analysis without previous membrane filtration (o-PO43–WMF), o-PO43– that
433
adsorbed onto Fe(OH)2 or Fe(OH)3 was also determined. The precipitation of iron hydroxide
434
suggests that PBTC and HEDP were partly present in the noncomplexed state. In this state,
435
phosphonates are not degradable solely by UV radiation of 6 kWh/m³ (Fig. 3a). Approx. 10%
436
of NTMP was converted to o-PO43– almost constantly over the entire pH range. The
437
degradation rate of these three phosphonates between pH 5 and 8 decreased according to their
438
number of phosphonate groups (in parentheses): PBTC (1) >> HEDP (2) > NTMP (3).
439
EDTMP (4) and DTPMP (5) proved to be stable against UV radiation of 6 kWh/m³, even in
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT the presence of FeII. Lesueur et al. (2005) had shown a significantly stronger oxidation of the
441
aminophosphonates NTMP, EDTMP and DTPMP to o-PO43– with higher UV performance
442
(112 kWh/m³) and lower pH values (3 and 5–6) than was the case at pH 10. The results of
443
Experiment 2 show that the stable C-PO(OH)2 groups of the phosphonates may also be the
444
limiting factor with respect to the conversion rate of the phosphonates to o-PO43– by UV/FeII
445
as in Experiment 1.
446
All phosphonates were converted to o-PO43– by treatment with UV/H2O2 in the neutral and
447
alkaline pH range between 30 and 50% (Fig. 3c). With increasing pH, the aminophosphonates
448
also showed a slightly increasing oxidation to o-PO43–, which is due either to an improved
449
efficiency of the UV/H2O2 process at higher pH values (Benjamin and Lawler, 2013) or
450
possibly to a better degradability of phosphonate species with a larger negative charge. It is
451
noticeable that EDTMP and DTPMP could be degraded better by UV/H2O2 over the entire
452
tested pH range than by UV/FeII. This means that EDTMP and DTPMP do not necessarily
453
have to be present as complexes in order to be significantly converted to o-PO43– by hydroxyl
454
radicals. The nitrogen-free phosphonates PBTC and HEDP showed almost no pH dependence
455
with respect to their conversion to o-PO43– by UV/H2O2 over the entire investigated range.
456
Interestingly, a small peak with respect to the oxidation to o-PO43– could be observed for both
457
nitrogen-free phosphonates around pH 5. At pH 5, the doubly negatively charged species is
458
predominant in both phosphonates (pKa values of PBTC: 3.74, 4.23, 5.14, 6.80, 9.05 (Liu et
459
al., 2000), pKa values of HEDP: <1, 2.54, 6.97, 11.41 (Carroll and Irani, 1967)). It is possible
460
that this reacts preferably to o-PO43–.
461
While PBTC was the only phosphonate reacting more weakly to o-PO43– by UV/FeII/H2O2
462
with increasing pH, the polyphosphonates showed a tendency towards more pronounced o-
463
PO43– formation, especially with increasing pH (Fig. 3d). For the phosphonates HEDP and
464
EDTMP, the maximum c(o-PO43–WMF)/c(TP0)-ratio was already established above a neutral
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT pH value, whereas for the phosphonates NTMP and DTPMP even with the highest pH values
466
(pH 8.0–9.5) the conversion to o-PO43– still increased further. PBTC was by far the most
467
easily degradable phosphonate (70–80% conversion to o-PO43–) in the acidic pH range, while
468
the conversion rate to o-PO43– of all other phosphonates at pH 3.4–3.6 was, at most, 35%. At
469
this pH, the oxidation of the phosphonates to o-PO43– correlated with their phosphonate group
470
number (in parentheses): PBTC (1) >> HEDP (2) > NTMP (3) ≈ EDTMP (4) > DTPMP (5).
471
In the neutral pH range, the extent of the conversion of the phosphonates to o-PO43– was as
472
follows: HEDP (2) ≈ PBTC (1) > EDTMP (4) ≈ NTMP (3) > DTPMP (5). At pH >6, HEDP
473
had the highest degradability to o-PO43–, while here the maximum conversion of all other
474
phosphonates to o-PO43– was between 50 and 60%.
475
The decreasing degradation of PBTC to o-PO43– with increasing pH can be explained by the
476
precipitation of iron hydroxide. This precipitation occurs rather for nitrogen-free
477
phosphonates, since these form less stable complexes with metals compared to
478
aminophosphonates (Knepper, 2003). Thus, at higher pH values, free PBTC is present, which
479
is significantly less degradable by UV/H2O2 compared to the FeII-PBTC complex (Fig. 3c). In
480
the case of polyphosphonates, degradation by UV/FeII/H2O2 predominantly occurred in the
481
alkaline range. In this pH milieu, polyphosphonates preferably complex the dosed FeII, so that
482
it can be assumed that the improved degradation with alkaline pH values is essentially due to
483
the fact that the phosphonates are more easily attacked in a complexed form by hydroxyl
484
radicals (at least for HEDP and NTMP). Furthermore, this experiment clearly showed that
485
phosphonates are converted less to o-PO43– by means of UV/FeII and UV/FeII/H2O2 the larger
486
their number of phosphonate groups is. As already explained in Section 3.1, the C-PO(OH)2
487
groups in the phosphonates are considered to be the most stable component in the molecule,
488
so that a high number of phosphonate groups also limits the degradation rate of the
489
phosphonates. In conclusion, the treatment with UV/FeII/H2O2 (Photo-Fenton) in water
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT proved to be a good means of oxidizing all phosphonates. The next experiment (Exp. 3)
491
should show whether this good oxidisability is also present in wastewater where UV light
492
absorbing turbidity may be present or oxidation of other readily degradable organic
493
components as well as free-radical scavengers can occur.
494
3.3 UV/FeII, UV/H2O2, UV/FeII/H2O2 in cooling tower effluent (Experiment 3)
495
Fig. 4 summarizes the results of an experiment in which cooling tower effluent spiked with
496
3 mg/L PBTC was treated with UV, UV/FeII, UV/H2O2 and UV/FeII/H2O2 at pH 3.5. The
497
results of the oxidation extent of organically bound phosphorus to o-PO43– (o-PO43–WMF) after
498
the one-hour reaction phase, as well as the phosphorus fractions immediately following
499
membrane filtration (‟MF”) at pH 3.5, and the same for the sample neutralized immediately
500
after the reaction phase and also membrane-filtered, are shown.
M AN U
0.50 0.45 0.40 0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00
Total P0
o-PO43–-P
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mg/L
SC
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490
503 504 505 506
Raw sample
Fig. 4:
UV
o-PO43–-P (MF) (pH 3.5)
UV/FeII
Total P (MF) (pH 3.5) UV/H2O2
o-PO43–-P (MF) (pH 7.0)
Total P (MF) (pH 7.0)
UV/FeII/H2O2
Formation and concentration of o-PO43– and TP in cooling tower effluent as a result of a
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Total P0 and o-PO43–-P o-PO43–-PWMF (raw sample) (homogeneous) (pH 3.5)
one-hour UV radiation (3 kWh/m³) at pH 3.5 (adjusted with H2SO4) with 4.6 mg/L FeII and 30 mg/L H2O2 of a membrane-filtered (MF) sample before (pH 3.5) and after neutralization using NaOH (pH 7.0). No significant pH drop could be observed during the contact time.
507
The oxidation extent of organically bound phosphorus to o-PO43– was similar to the results
508
found in Experiment 2 with PBTC dissolved in pure water (UV/FeII ≥ UV/FeII/H2O2 >
509
UV/H2O2 > UV). An oxidation of PBTC to o-PO43– already occurred during treatment with 24
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT UV light without chemical dosage, whereas no oxidation of PBTC to o-PO43– had been
511
observed by sole UV radiation in the pure water test, even at a higher UV energy consumption
512
(6 kWh/m³). The UV oxidation of PBTC can be explained by metals present in the cooling
513
tower effluent (e.g., Fe and Al, Section 2.1.2). Thus, a photolysis catalyzed by metals could
514
also occur without FeII dosage, although in this case the o-PO43– formation was only half as
515
high as with FeII dosage.
516
In the sample treated with UV/FeII/H2O2 could a reduced concentration of o-PO43– and TP
517
after membrane filtration at pH 3.5 be seen. In this batch, an oxidation of ferrous iron to ferric
518
iron was evident by H2O2. In contrast to FeII, FeIII precipitates at pH 3.5 (Barrera-Díaz et al.,
519
2003), resulting in adsorbent for o-PO43– and organically bound phosphorus. Furthermore,
520
non-soluble FePO4 could form.
521
The neutralization immediately after the one-hour reaction phase resulted in an almost
522
complete removal of the o-PO43– formed in the samples treated with UV/FeII and
523
UV/FeII/H2O2 and a total of 80–85% TP decrease. FeII precipitates above pH 8.7 at the dosed
524
concentration of 4.6 mg/L FeII (Barrera-Díaz et al., 2003). Thus, in both samples, FeIII (mainly
525
the adsorbent iron hydroxide and non-soluble FePO4) had to be formed. In the sample treated
526
with UV/FeII/H2O2, this was done predominantly by the oxidation of FeII to FeIII by H2O2, as
527
already described. In the sample treated with UV/FeII, this oxidation must have taken place
528
during the neutralization by O2 dissolved in the sample.
529
The samples without addition of FeII (UV, UV/H2O2) retained the concentration of dissolved
530
o-PO43– largely after neutralization. The TP could only be slightly removed by neutralization
531
since there was no iron as precipitant.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 3.4 FeII/H2O2 in phosphonate production wastewater (Experiment 4)
533
During the reaction phase (c(FeII)/c(H2O2)=0.08 [g/g]) at pH 2.1–2.5, only about 15% of the
534
organically bound phosphorus of phosphonate production wastewater were oxidized to o-
535
PO43– (50 out of 350 mg/L P) (Fig. 5 left). When the wastewater was treated with Fenton
536
reagent in the course of the neutralization variant 1 (direct neutralization following the
537
reaction phase), an almost 100% TP (supernatant) and o-PO43–-PWMF (supernatant) decrease
538
occurred at an H2O2 concentration of 10.2 g/L (corresponding to the stoichiometrically
539
required oxidant concentration, thus 100% H2O2) and 0.82 g/L FeII. With the neutralization
540
variant 2 (reaction, then sedimentation (acidic), then neutralization of the supernatant and
541
sedimentation (neutral)), an almost 100% TP decrease was already achieved at 5.1 g/L H2O2
542
(50%) and 0.41 g/L FeII.
350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0
547 548
0.8
1.0
0
25
50
75
100
0.4
FeII (g/L) 0.6 0.8
125
1.0
0
0.2
o-PO43–-PWMF (supernatant)
0
25 50 75 100 125 cH₂₂O₂₂ · 100 % · COD0–1 · 2.125–1 (%) Supernatant N2a (acidic)
0
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
Total P (supernatant)
25
50
75
100
125
150
Supernatant N2b (neutral)
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Fig. 5:
0.2
Formation and concentration of o-PO43– and TP after treatment of phosphonate production wastewater with Fenton reagent at a constant c(FeII)/c(H2O2) ratio of 0.08
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0.6
Supernatant N1 (neutral)
543
545
0.4
o-PO43–-PWMF (homogeneous)
0
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0
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[g/g] (proportional increase of FeII and H2O2) and pH 2.1–2.5 (pH 2.5 adjusted with H2SO4; the pH could decrease during the reaction phase to a minimum of 2.1) according to the neutralization variants 1 and 2. Raw sample: 350 mg/L TP, 4.8 g/L COD0.
549
The low formation extent of o-PO43– was in accordance with the o-PO43– formation found in
550
Experiment 1 (pure water) when no UV radiation was applied. The low o-PO43– formation
551
indicates that complexing agents may have remained in the sample after the reaction phase, 26
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT probably predominantly in the form of phosphonates and their degradation products capable
553
of complex formation. Since the reaction rate of the reduction of FeIII to FeII (Equation 2) is
554
slower than the reaction rate of the oxidation of FeII to FeIII (Equation 1), over time an
555
accumulation of FeIII and thus the precipitate Fe(OH)3 in the samples with Fenton reagent
556
occurs. Although, as mentioned, there were probably still complexing agents in the sample
557
after the reaction phase, at pH 2.1–2.5, iron hydroxide sludge could precipitate due to the
558
decreased effectiveness of these complexing agents because of the low pH. Furthermore, o-
559
PO43–, phosphonates, as well as their degradation products have the best adsorption affinity
560
for iron hydroxides at low pH values (Nowack and Stone, 1999). When the sample was
561
neutralized directly after the reaction phase (neutralization variant 1), the residual complexing
562
agents could have interfered with the precipitation of iron hydroxide, and thus, with the
563
formation of adsorbent for the TP, because the increase in pH led to a more pronounced
564
effectiveness of the residual complexing agents. The complete absence of a TP elimination in
565
a small dosage concentration range (below 30 %) and mere part removal at values between 50
566
and 100 % (stoichiometric ratio) when performing the neutralization variant 1 indicated that
567
clearly. Thus, the neutralization variant 2 performed better than neutralization variant 1 since
568
most of the complexing agents were separated from the sample when a sludge separation
569
occurred at an acidic pH.
570
The similarly high TP concentrations in both of the supernatants (N2a and N2b) resulting
571
from the neutralization variant 2 show that the phosphorus compounds were removed mainly
572
in the first sedimentation stage (‟supernatant N2a (acidic)”), thus at acidic pH. Phosphorus
573
compounds which had not been removed in the first sedimentation stage were separated by
574
iron hydroxide flocks at the latest produced during neutralization. The slightly higher o-PO43–-
575
PWMF concentration in the supernatant of neutralization variant 1 (‟supernatant N1 (neutral)”)
576
compared to the concentration prior to the sedimentation (‟o-PO43–-PWMF (homogeneous)”)
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT can be explained by residual H2O2 in the sample, which could further oxidize organic
578
phosphorus compounds during the sedimentation phase.
579
4 Conclusions
580
The degradability of the phosphonates PBTC, HEDP, NTMP, EDTMP and DTPMP by means
581
of metal-catalyzed photolysis (UV/FeII), Fenton method (FeII/H2O2) and Photo-Fenton method
582
(UV/FeII/H2O2) was investigated.
583
This work has shown that polyphosphonates can be converted to phosphate by a maximum of
584
20% by means of Fenton reagent at pH 2.5–3.5 in a pure water matrix even at a very high
585
excess of H2O2 (also high Fe excess, thus, influence of complex formation is marginal).
586
Therefore, in order to oxidize phosphonates to a higher extent, the oxidation process has to be
587
supported by UV radiation (whether in the UV/FeII or in the UV/FeII/H2O2 process).
588
Interestingly, the degradation of polyphosphonates in the UV/FeII/H2O2 process increased
589
with increasing pH. This is in contrast to the general assumption that the Fenton process
590
works best at low pH values. Further tests with wastewater would therefore have to
591
investigate whether, in the special case of the desired phosphonate oxidation, higher reaction
592
pH values than usual lead to better results on the TP removal.
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CATALYZED PHOTOLYSIS: catalyst: FeSO4
UV-FSR: UV free surface reactor NT: neutralization tank ST: sludge separation tank RT: reaction tank
H 2 SO 4/ NaOH
UV
H 2SO 4 /NaOH
concentrate
ST UV-FSR
NT
phosphonate reduced wastewater
FENTON: Ca(OH) 2/NaOH
H 2SO 4
raw wastewater
593
sludge
Fenton reagent: FeSO4 /H 2 O 2
ST
ST NT
RT
sludge (acidic)
sludge (neutral)
28
phosphonate reduced wastewater
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 594
Fig. 6:
Proposal for the implementation of a continuously operated wastewater treatment plant
595
according to the UV/FeII and Fenton principle for industrial wastewater containing
596
phosphonates.
An experiment with clear, Ca2+-rich, organically little loaded and PBTC-containing cooling
598
water could confirm the results from the pure water experiments with PBTC. Accordingly, the
599
organically bound phosphorus was successfully degraded to phosphate in this wastewater by
600
the UV/FeII and the UV/FeII/H2O2 method. Furthermore, the TP removal performance
601
between the UV/FeII and the UV/FeII/H2O2 method was hardly different. It was found that the
602
dosed iron precipitates even when no H2O2 is dosed in the UV/FeII process through pH
603
neutralization carried out following the reaction phase at pH 3.5 if, during the reaction phase,
604
the phosphonate is decomposed completely or decomposed into reaction products which are
605
no longer capable of complexation. Thus, neutralization can take place immediately following
606
the reaction phase (neutralization variant 1) (Fig. 6). The o-PO43– formed during the reaction
607
phase is thereby discharged from the wastewater via filtration or sedimentation. The UV/FeII
608
process is very selective and is recommended only if the organically bound phosphorus
609
fraction in the wastewater is mainly composed of compounds susceptible to metal-catalyzed
610
photolysis such as phosphonates. Furthermore, only a very small sludge amount is to be
611
expected due to the fact that only very low amounts of iron are sufficient for successful
612
oxidation of the phosphonate. Accordingly, the UV/FeII method is particularly suitable for
613
concentrates with nitrogen-free phosphonates, a low turbidity and COD load and no
614
competing complexing agents.
615
The low oxidation extent of polyphosphonates to phosphate by means of sole Fenton reagent
616
(no UV radiation) in pure water could also be found for a phosphonate-containing, organically
617
highly polluted wastewater matrix (phosphonate production wastewater). However, it was
618
discovered that complete conversion of the phosphonate to phosphate was not absolutely
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT necessary for removal of TP in this kind of wastewater. Since phosphonates adsorb on the
620
Fenton sludge, they are also removed via the sludge separation (sedimentation or filtration).
621
The experiments showed that the following procedure should be applied for a chemical-
622
saving application of the Fenton method when applied to organically polluted wastewater
623
without support of UV radiation (neutralization variant 2, Fig. 6): reaction → sludge
624
separation (acidic) → neutralization of the supernatant → sludge separation (neutral; in the
625
case of full precipitation of added FeII in the acidic sludge separation no sludge separation
626
could be necessary here). If, on the other hand, neutralization takes place immediately
627
following the reaction phase, phosphonates or other complexing agents remaining in the
628
sample after the reaction phase can interfere with the precipitation of iron hydroxide due to
629
their higher effectiveness as complexing agents at higher pH. Thereby, less adsorbent is
630
present for the removal of phosphonates and their degradation products, which, moreover,
631
exhibit a weaker adsorption affinity for iron hydroxide in the neutral and alkaline pH range
632
than in the acidic pH range (Nowack and Stone, 1999).
633
The UV lamp used in our experiments was too weak for very turbid, heavily organically
634
polluted wastewaters, which is why further investigations with stronger UV lamps have to be
635
carried out to find out whether there is a more pronounced phosphonate degradation by the
636
Photo-Fenton method compared to the Fenton method in these kind of wastewaters.
637
Acknowledgements
638
The authors are grateful for the financial support by the Willy-Hager-Stiftung, Stuttgart. We
639
would also like to thank the employees of Zschimmer & Schwarz Mohsdorf GmbH & Co. KG
640
for providing phosphonate samples.
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Dr. Eduard Rott INSTITUTE FOR SANITARY ENGINEERING, WATER QUALITY AND SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
UNIVERSITÄT STUTTGART
Institute for Sanitary Engineering, Water Quality and Solid Waste Management ● Bandtäle 2 ● 70569 Stuttgart
D-70569 Stuttgart (Büsnau) Bandtäle 2
Editorial Board Water Research To whom it may concern
Phone Fax
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+49 711 685 – 60497 +49 711 685 – 63729
E-Mail:
[email protected]
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Date th February 7 2017
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Subject: Paper highlights
Phosphonates could be degraded well using UV/FeII and UV/Fenton.
•
The stability of phosphonates depends on their number of phosphonate groups.
•
UV/FeII treatment worked well on clear, less organically polluted wastewater.
•
For a better Fenton performance, the acidic supernatant should be neutralized.
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•